Yesterday was the first day in a while my upper legs did not feel achy and tired. The twitching was only in my feet (it never stops there). Of course today, I'm back to twitchy legs and mild achiness though not as bad. I also think I saw my first true tongue twitches. Just a few little quick ones but there just the same. I had hope for a day. It was nice.

Even just one day of hope can change your thinking process and give you a break from the worry. It's baby steps but you will get there. Time is the great healer when it comes to BFS symptoms.

BFS FAQ:1. No, that's not bulbar2. No, the location doesn't matter3. Yes, we have all had that symptom4. No, you're not the exception5. No, that's not ominous6. No, you don't need an EMG7. Yes, you will be fine

TwitchyDoc -- if you take that sentence in context then I suppose it does sound a little *beep*.

However if you follow LK's posts -- SHE -- panics about everything and is on high notice to her body and all the little oddities that we all have --- so I was just reassuring her that she did not see a tongue twitch at least a sinister one.

RIno468 wrote:so I was just reassuring her that she did not see a tongue twitch at least a sinister one

Not sure if this will help, but today I saw my speech pathologist who I have been seeing for most of this year as part of the monitoring of a swallowing problem I have had since last December. She looked at my tongue and could see it quivering and trembling/twitching when I stuck it out and said that they're not the type of twitch that would interest a neuro, and my tongue has been twitching on and off (more on than off though) probably for about 18 months. I didn't want to know the finer details of what the suspicious twitches would look like in a tongue, I'm just glad and accept that mine are benign. And how do I know my tongue twitches - I can see them as clear as day and feel them as well. My tongue twitching started many months after the rest of my body, sometimes my tongue seems to twitch more than the rest of me. I had an EMG of my tongue in May this year and it was clean.

readytocheckout wrote: She looked at my tongue and could see it quivering and trembling/twitching when I stuck it out and said that they're not the type of twitch that would interest a neuro, and

No neurologist assesses tongue for fasciculations while it is stuck out. The crucial point is to observe the tongue while it is resting on the floor of the mouth. In addition, many people here report tongue twitches but in fact, they have normal tremor/movement.

This is basically how tongue fasciculation look like. Uploaded from a girl I know (benign fasciculation)

Yes yes I do get nervous bc of my abnormalities on my emg which I truly never expected. However I draw the line at looking at twitches of an als patient. So thanks for posting but I will not look at this video.

My tongue does exactly the same as the one in the video. Not that often mind, once or twice a day for a few runs of twitches.I try not to get too excited about it. It is a muscle, all my other muscles twitch so why should that be excempt.Take care vx

TwitchyDoc wrote:No neurologist assesses tongue for fasciculations while it is stuck out.

Yes I know. My apologies for my badly worded post, it was meant to mean that the tongue twitches & tremors etc meant nothing while it was stuck out. They checked my tongue while it was resting in my mouth and saw fasics and said that they're nothing like anything that would be a cause for concern and that was enough for me to not ask any further!

LKP1231 wrote:However I draw the line at looking at twitches of an als patient.